Distributive Optical Energy System

ABSTRACT

A system for generating and transmitting energy and methods of manufacturing and using the same. The system for generating and transmitting energy includes prisms, lenses, mirrors, optical cables or optic conduits, heat filters, light filters, and electricity filters. The lenses comprise lens systems to capture electromagnetic signals (wave and particle) coming from any source of radiant energy, from one or more sources of light, from one or more reflective surfaces, or from any electromagnetic wave, long or short. Upon receiving the electromagnetic signals, the lens system multiple n times the intensity of the signals by a method of infinitesimal folding of signals, a method basically consisting of an over-concentration of signals folding onto themselves tenth to millionth times in order to produce substantially concentrated signals and to project the substantially concentrated signals into one single optical cable. These substantially concentrated signals are transmitted to long distances as they are reflected through the interior of these optical cables or any especial optic conduits (in a conceptual manner similar to signal reflection in fiber optics cables). At the distal ends of the optical cable three filters will extract heat, white light and electricity.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional PatentApplication No. 60/728,245, filed Oct. 19, 2005, which is hereinincorporated by reference in its entirety.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE

A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains materialthat is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has noobjection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent documentor the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and TrademarkOffice patent files or records, but otherwise reserves all copyrightrights whatsoever.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to a distributive optical energy system andmethod. More specifically, the invention relates to a system fortransmitting solar and non-solar energy through one or more conduits ofheat-resistance optical cables.

BACKGROUND

It has been known since Einstein's break with classical physics thatlight travels as both a wave and particle, and that energy is directlyproportional to a body's inertia and to the speed of light. It has beenalso known from his special relativity that the energy of any object canbe found by combining its inert with its kinetic energy in an equationwith just three parameters: mass, the speed of light and the particlespeed. However, to support his theory, Einstein required that time islocked into energy's conservation and conversion principles.

Due to the energy crises and environmental problems, finding alternativeenergy solutions has been recently put back into the scientific andpolitical discourse. However, at technology level, time is still withinthe reversibility domain, and energy devices are sill dependent onentropy constancy. Solar energy, for example, has been considered assolely localized, exclusively based on linear models of energyconservation and conversion.

In view of the foregoing, it is believed that a need exists for a systemfor transmitting electromagnetic radiation that overcomes theaforementioned obstacles, limitations, and deficiencies of currentlyavailable energy generating and distributing systems.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A system for transmitting solar and non-solar energy through one or moreconduits of heat-resistance optical cables is disclosed. The systemcomprises a first mirror-lens system for concentrating scatteredelectromagnetic solar rays into a focal plane to produce focused rays. Amirror system concentrator concentrates the focused rays by an N factor.The system includes a coupler and an optical cable to align the focusedrays into one conduit of an optical cable and generate a complex opticalwave. A coupling focusing collimator couples the optical cable to threedifferent filters where the complex wave is converted into focused raysand then into heat, light, and electricity. A heat filter filters theheat. A light filter filters the light. An electricity filter filtersthe electricity.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING

FIG. 1 is an illustration of preferred embodiments of a system forgenerating and transmitting energy in accordance with the presentinvention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

FIG. 1 shows a generator system 200, its first stage composed byobjective lenses 220 placed towards luminous, audible and non-audibleemitting objects, which emit radiant energy 215 in the form ofelectromagnetic signals. These electromagnetic signals 215 travel fromthe said emitting objects in every direction; when the said signals 215hit the optical collector 210, the reflected signals 216 travel towardsthe objective lens system 220 from which refracted rays 225 areprojected towards a focal plane. A mirror system concentrator DISC) 230is placed in axial alignment and at the focal length with the lenssystem 220. The rays 225 of the lens system 220 (the Zoom lens system)are projected onto the MSC 230, which concentrates the rays n times. Inone embodiment, N times preferably vary from tenths to millions. Inorder terms, by multiplying the rays 225 of the lens system 220 by afactor N, the MSC 230 produces a singular over-concentrated light (SOL)235. It should be understood, for the purpose of the presentdescription, that the term “light” encompasses all the electromagneticspectrum, from short waves to cosmic rays. The MSC 230, comprisingseveral mirrors in one embodiment, concentrates rays in order to obtaina maximum absolute intensity, i.e., ray intensity in itself. Thismaximum of intensity is designated herein as the SOL. The MSC 230concentrates the incoming rays 225 proportional to the wave/particleconcentration area and a pre-defined energy demand. One embodimentcomprises 16 mirrors, where the radius of curvatures ranges from 20 mmto 6 mm. This MSC reaches a ten thousand concentration index.

In operation, the resultant concentrated energy 235, i.e., SOL, entersan optical cable 120—which includes one or many heat-resistant opticconduits—through a collimating and coupler system 240. The saidcollimating system 240 is in axial alignment with the said MSC 230, andthe said optical conduits 120 in order to produce parallel rayscomposing the said SOL 235. Once the SOL 235 enters the conduits 120,the SOL's highly intensified rays reflect in the interior of the opticalconduit 120 creating a complex energy wave (CEW) 110. The CEW 110depends on the diameter and length of the optical conduit 120, on thecharacteristics of the conduit's surface (such as smoothness andelasticity), on the refractive and reflective indexes of the conduit'score and clad (if applied), on the concentration index of the MSC 230,and on the angle of reflection as the SOL's rays enter the conduit 120.

Preferably, the CEW 110 obeys the following equation:

Z ² +C=E,

where E is the complex energy, C is a complex number, and Z is afeed-forwarding variable, which includes E, and is proportional to thewave density. The CEW 110 comprises a light folding process, meaningthat its highly concentrated light rays carry heat and white light. Atthe distal end of the conduit 120, heat, white light, and electricityare filtered out.

At the distal end of the optical cable 110, one or many conduitscarrying the CEW 110 are optically coupled, collimated and focusedwith 1) a heat filter; an iodine compound 350; 2) a light filter: analum compound 390; and 3) an electricity filter: a thermal pile compound370. In one embodiment, a filter is an apparatus that extracts aproperty from a process.

The CEW 110, and its dissipative (chaotic) self-organizing wavestructure, allows the use of very low optical cable diameters: varyingfrom a few microns to a few centimetres, depending on eachconfiguration, energy potential source or demand. This fact enablesremote installation of these generator units. Note that CEW'sself-organizing behaviour happens especially due to the nonlinearitiescreated by collision (intra photon and photon-electron). This loss ofmomentum dissipates as heat and feeds itself back into the CEW 110,serving as the energy kick that keeps the wave chaotic, thereforeself-organizing.

A generator unit 200 (FIG. 1) which includes the ray-capturing system210/220 (mirror-lens collectors and/or acoustic bowls, and an objectivelens compound), the MSC 230, and the coupler 240, can be installed inevery source of solar or non-solar radiation. The generator system 200is divided in two categories: 1) solar radiation which implies the useof solar collectors preferably parabolic or circular mirrors (210) forreflection of solar waves and objective lenses (220) for refraction andfocusing of direct solar radiation onto the MSC 230; 2) non-solarradiation which implies the use of optical collectors using acombination of mirrors-acoustic bowls (210) and objective lenses (220)in order to reflect and refract audible (long) and non-audible (short)electromagnetic waves, and to focus them onto the MSC (230). Therefore,any source of electromagnetic radiation, such as human voices, animal orinsect noises, friction noises (such as automobile tires on ground),industrial non-audible noises from motors, engines, classrooms,auditoriums, musical instruments, orchestral concerts, ocean waves, anddirect/indirect solar radiation, is a potential source of radiantenergy. A local station (said generator 200) can be installed in any ofthese or other sources, then, via one single optical cable, transmitenergy to the distal local station (consumer 300) for consumerdistribution.

In this case, continuous (day and night) generation of energy can beprovided. In one embodiment, a local station includes two types ofgenerators presented: one that captures solar or luminous radiation, andanother that captures all other sources of electromagnetic radiation.Therefore, at night-time this latter local station makes use of thenon-solar generator to generate energy from all sources ofelectromagnetic radiation.

In one embodiment, an application of a solar radiation generator unituses earth's solar energy, which reaches a maximum average of 1 KW/m²(one kilowatt per square meter). One local station using one solarradiation generator unit with a density index of 1×10⁶ (one million)would produce 1×10⁶ KW/m² (one million Kilowatt per square meter). Ahome in the U.S. requires an average of 30 KW/m². This solar generatorunit alone feeds 1×10⁶ KW/m²÷30 KW/m²=30,000 homes.

An application of a non-solar radiation generation unit uses any form ofnon-solar electromagnetic radiation. Following the logic of the solargenerator discussed in the previous example, one local non-solar unithas a density index of 1×10⁶ (one million). A human being's voice intalking mode averages 3×10⁵ Watts while a human being's voice inshouting mode averages 3×10⁻² Watts. These voices can be powered throughelectronic power amplifiers. In this regard, one person talking alonewill theoretically generate through the said non-solar generator unitthe following wattage: 3×10⁻⁵ Watts×1×10⁶=30 W. If 1,000 people talk forone hour, they will feed an average home in the U.S. for one hour.Likewise, using the same density index of said generator, one personshouting for an hour would feed one home for one hour: (3×10⁻²Watts×1×10⁶=30 000 W.) From these examples, those skilled in the art canrecognize possibilities to use energy from non-solar sources that areimmense, and many different embodiments can be used. A city produces anunlimited variety of audible, non-audible, and industrial sources ofenergy that can be potentialized using the non-solar generator. A ruralarea has many other potential sources of energy, such as insects,animals, streams, rivers, electricity wiring transmitters, and such, andcan include any form of electromagnetic radiation.

In one embodiment, the density index is limited by the quality of theoptical cable including its material weight, granularity, elasticity,diameter, heat-resistance factor, and by the quality and heat resistancefactors of mirrors and lenses. In one embodiment, the higher the densityindex, the higher the cable's diameter is increased to improve thecable's, mirror's and glasses' heat-resistance factors. However, thecable's diameter has an exponential relation with the density index, avalue that can be optimized for different applications. In oneembodiment, the main variables that determine the limits of the densityindex are: the total reflection factor and the heat-resistant factor ofthe optical cable; the mirror's planar and spherical reflection index;the lenses refraction indexes; the heat-resistance factor of mirrors andglasses; and the integrity of CEW's dissipative and self-organizingbehaviour.

In one embodiment, the use of bio and nanotechnology can aid inobtaining higher density indexes while maintaining a small optical cablediameter so that a higher complex energy keeps its dissipative andself-organizing behaviour (CEW) as it continuously propagates until itreaches the optical cable's distal end (the consumer's end).

In one embodiment, the density index is determined depending on eachinstallation. In operation is a system to capture radiation from a 1W/m² energy/area source, which is one thousandth the amount of the solaraverage energy on earth. A single optical conduit of an internaldiameter of 10 mm is used. Although the concentrator factor can reachany magnitude, limited by the first law of thermodynamics and adjustedaccording to each installation, the concentrator factor for the MSC 230is calculated so that the original 1 m² reference area is reduced to theoptical conduit surface area which is π×r²=3.14×5²=78.5 mm². Therefore,the concentrator factor will be 1 m²÷78.5 mm²≈12,740. The average fluxat focal point will be 1 W/m²×12,740=12,740 W/m²; and at the conduit'ssurface area, which is 78.5 mm², the flux will be 1 W/m². Considering anefficiency of 0.9, the real average flux will be 12,740 W/m²×0.9=11,466W/m². The MSC design is based on concepts known to the art of solarenergy collectors, applied to both parabolic and spherical mirrors aswell as to lenses, and varies depending on each application.Conceptually, the mathematics of optical collectors design is basicallyderived from known heat transfer and optical laws, notably: 1) the threemodes of heat transfer, namely conduction, convection and radiation; 2)the laws of reflection and refraction relating the interaction betweenelectromagnetic radiation and matter. To calculate the amount of heat atthe entrance of the said optical conduit 120, the Stefan-Boltzmann lawof radiation is used: H=AeδT⁴ [where H=Radiant Energy in watts;A=Surface Area; e=the emissivity; δ=the Boltzmann constant (5.6699×10⁻⁸W.m⁻².K⁻⁴); T=Kelvin Temperature].

In case of a MSC composed of lenses, mirrors, or a combination of both,thermal radiation will be increased and can be calculated using quantumradiation propagation based on two relations: 1) the energy of a photon:E=hv [where v is frequency and h is Planck's constant=6.625×10⁻³⁴ J.s);2) c=λv=co^(a)/n (where c=the speed of tight; λ=wavelength; v=frequency;co^(a)=the speed of light in a vacuum; n=index of refraction of themedium.] Note that thermal radiation is usually considered to fallwithin the band from about 0.1 to 100 μm, whereas solar radiation isconcentrated in the wavelength range between 0.1 and 3 μm. The use ofspherical mirrors is preferable for having less surface contact,therefore emitting less thermal radiation. Applying the above values inthe formula and calculating for T, the temperature at focal point willbe:

$\begin{matrix}{T = {{\,^{4}\left. \sqrt{}H \right.}/\delta}} \\{= {{\,^{4}\left. \sqrt{}11 \right.},466\mspace{14mu} W\text{/}{m^{2} \div 5.6699} \times 10^{- 8}\mspace{11mu} {W \cdot m^{- 2} \cdot K^{- 4}}}} \\{T \approx {671\mspace{11mu} K}} \\{\approx {398\mspace{14mu} {C.}}}\end{matrix}$

This thermo dense light enters the optical conduit at an angle (lessthan 45 degrees) such that to balance inner reflection with theconduit's heat resistance. It should be noted that, in order to obey theprinciple of total reflection through the optical conduit, a core andcladding section (similar to fiber optics but with much higherdimensions) could be applied to the optical conduit's physicalstructure. As soon as radiant electromagnetic rays enter the cold andreflective surface of a 10 mm inner diameter of the optical conduit,persistent particle interactions cause the optical conduit's internalenergy to change; an energy which is limited by the system'sthermodynamic limit (the ratio of the total number of particles pertotal volume). Several physical phenomena will happen at once, but mostimportantly the rise in temperature will alter the molecular structureof the glass and stimulate electrons to change energy levels, thereforegenerating more photons. The heat from particle stimulation istransformed in work according to Q=cmΔT [where Q=heat capacity inJ/(kg.C.°) which depends on the nature of the material (for glass=840);cm=mass in kg, ΔT=the temperature change.] This work feeds back into theelectromagnetic radiation. However, because particle collision will behappening in three or more dimensions and in random motion, eachparticle will change speed and direction of motion, and the interactionphoton-electron could generate photons travelling faster than the speedof light. As a photon is absorbed by an electron, the electron transitsto a lower energy level, and a new photon is released. This scatteringof light could lead the electron to travel backwards in time in order toabsorb a photon. A photon, while being generated by a differentiatingelectron, can also travel backwards in time, changing particle chargeand generating an anti-particle. These particles while travellingbackwards in time can also collide. When a particle and an anti-particlecollide they annihilate each other: however, depending on the amplitudeand frequency more than one photon can be released from theparticle-anti-particle collision. This phenomenon, according to quantumelectrodynamics, illustrates an increase of light intensity and arelease of energy that feeds back into the overall electromagnetic wave.The total energy generated will be proportional to the overall glassarea of the optical conduit, the quality of the glass, the density index(as discussed previously), and the heat. The total energy E is the sumof the rest energy Eo and the kinetic energy KE, or E=Eo+KE and is basedon Einstein's special relativity given by the relation: E=mc²/√1−v²/c²(m=mass; v=particle speed; c=speed of light). From this relation, if, asmentioned above, a particle travels backwards in time (speed higher thanthe speed of light) then v²/c² will be higher than 1, making √1−v²/c²=acomplex number. This new energy equation can be re-written as E=mc²/iy+C(where i=the imaginary part and C=a complex constant). According toQuantum Electrodynamics, the probability of an event is the absolutesquare of a complex number. Therefore, the probability of the event“particles travelling higher than the speed of light” becomes high inthe case in operation. This is one aspect that contributes to theformation of said CEW 110.

Another aspect is the nonlinearity of the glass's surface, which will beeven increased by its molecular thermal stress due to heat. As photonsand heat stimulate electrons that stimulate anti-particles and otherphotons and other anti-particles, they vibrate as waves depended onchange in momentum, energy and wavelength given by the De Broglie'srelation: λ=h/p (λ=particle wavelength; h=Planck's constant; p: themagnitude of the relativistic momentum of the particle). It should benoted that the amplitude for a photon to be emitted by a source varies,in general, with time. As time goes on, the angle of amplitude of aphoton to be emitted by a source changes. In the presently describedsystem, the source is white light and its many colors emit photonsrandomly, making the angle of amplitude change irregularly. Therefore, aphoton will change wavelength (therefore color) after being absorbedthen generated back as a new photon by an electron. The irregularitiesof particle wavelength and momentum are other contributions to thecreation of CEW.

The second law of thermodynamics states that “heat flows spontaneouslyfrom a substance at a higher temperature to a substance at a lowertemperature and does not flow spontaneously in the reverse direction.”Therefore, the heat wave flow will seek, in acceleration mode, theoptical conduit's distal end. This continual electromagnetic heat-flowmoves through the optical conduit and generates a special pattern inwhich millions of molecules move coherently, a situation that maintainsa state of non-equilibrium. Together with the nonlinearity on the glass'surface and the irregularities of particle wavelength and momentum, withtime this non-equilibrium state will turn the CEW into a self-organizingwave. Nobel Laureate Ilya Prigogine named this phenomenon “dissipativestructure.” According to Prigogine, farther away from equilibrium thefluxes are stronger, entropy production increases, and the system mayencounter instabilities leading to new forms of order that move thesystem farther and farther away from the equilibrium state as thesedissipative structures develop into forms of ever-increasing complexity.The high density of particle concentration will allow for the rapidlygrowth of clusters around more dense areas. These clusters easily movethrough the expanded (by heat tension) molecules of the glass allowingfor the transformation of (inert) energy into active energy as photonsstimulate electrons in other regions into the glass' thickness. Thisprocess increases the active population growth, i.e., the number ofstimulated electrons. The overall energy is given by CEW's relation:Z²+C=E, where E is the complex energy, C a complex number, and Z is afeed-forwarding variable, which includes E, and is proportional to thepopulation density.

Note that external factors, such as gravitation, can be magnified by nonequilibrium states which help increase symmetry breaking, contributingto the overall purpose of enhancing active population growth.Furthermore, the optical conduit can be made of organic material so thatexternal factors participate even more dynamically in the increase ofpopulation growth (to win particle threshold from inert to active) andthe consequent increase of integral energy as well as CEW's traveldistance.

A final consideration regarding the building of the MSC 230 relies onthe fact that it is common knowledge to anyone familiar in the art ofoptics applied to solar energy that to capture solar energy bothimage-forming (IF) and non-imaging forming (NIF) concentrators can beemployed. Regarding the IF's, ideal operation can be achieved by the useof spherically symmetric geometry, a dynamically flexible refractiveindex (for lens-based MSC's), and the use of materials (hybrid organic)with high refractive indexes and close to zero dispersion. Althoughenergy efficiency is much higher in NIF's concentrators, IF's have theadvantage of employing materials with much less heat resistance. Incompensation IF's concentrator factors are substantially lower thanNIF's. All that is said about IF's and NIF's for capturing solar energyis valid for capturing any source of electromagnetic radiation.

The Heat Filter extracts heat, i.e., it filters out heat from thecomplex energy wave, CEW. Heat travels in concentrated dissipative formwithin the CEW; there are many ways to extract this concentrated heatfrom the CEW. One process is by using an Iodine Composition in solid,liquid or gas form. The solid form, for example, is a prism composed byan iodine solution. In this case, as FIG. 1 shows, CEW 110 signalsbecome the non-scattered highly focused rays 345 after passing throughthe distributor collimator 320 as they are optically captured by theobjective mirror-lens system 340. The said rays 345 hit the iodine prism350 and only heat comes out because iodine blocks off visual light andallows infra-red to come out; and infra-red light, with wavelengthsaround 800 nanometers, produces the highest amount of radiant energy. Inoperation, the optical conduit/s carrying the CEW 110 is opticallycoupled through coupler 310 to the said distributor collimator 320optically in alignment with a focusing and collimating system 340,comprised of mirrors and prisms, to capture, align and focus the lightrays 325 (the regenerated consumer SOL), so that rays 345 are directlyfocused onto the said iodine solid, liquid or gas solution 350 fromwhich an over-concentrated infra-red light 355 is filtered out. Placinga bucket of water at the focal point of this ray, the bucket is led toboiling instantly. Placing a solid material like coke, it leadsimmediately to incandescence. Zinc burns up at the same place, whilemagnesium ribbon bursts into vivid combustion. A sheet of platinizedplatinum placed at the focus heats to whiteness.

The light filter extracts visible light, i.e., it filters out visiblelight from the complex energy wave, CEW. Visible light travels inconcentrated dissipative form within the CEW; there are many ways toextract this concentrated visible light from the CEW. One process is byusing an alum composition in solid, liquid or gas form. The solid form,for example, is a prism composed by an alum solution. In this case, seeFIG. 1, when the said rays 325 (the regenerated consumer SOL) from theCEW pass through the objective mirror-lens system 380 and hit the alumsolution 390, visible light 395 is filtered out. Therefore, as known inthe art since Newton, by placing a prism in axial alignment with thealum compound 390, all the color spectrum of visual light can be seen.In operation, the optical conduit/s carrying the CEW 110, is opticallycoupled through the coupler 310 to the said distributor collimator 320in optical alignment with a focusing and collimating system 340,comprised of mirrors and prisms, to capture, align and focus the lightrays 325 (the regenerated consumer SOL), so that the rays 385 aredirectly focused onto the said alum solid, liquid or gas solution 390from which a highly focused, collimated and over-concentrated visiblelight 395 is filtered out. All other rays of the luminous spectrum areblocked off. Small reflectors placed along the optical axis of thevisible light 395 serve as optical lamps. A conduit of fiber optics canalso take the visible light to local destinations of a building, forexample, where at distal ends the optical lamps are installed.

The Electricity Filter extracts electricity, i.e., it filters out ortransforms into electricity certain components of the complex energywave, CEW, like vibration, heat, magnetic and electric fields. Thesecomponents travel in concentrated dissipative form within the CEW; thereare many ways to extract and convert these concentrated components fromthe CEW. For example piezoelectricity is a process that convertsmechanical stress into voltage, and vice-versa, through piezo generatorsand piezo motors, respectively. The process per se is well known in theindustry. It can be used in one embodiment by the use of ceramic sheetsplaced in front of the light rays 325 (the regenerated consumer SOL) ashigh dense waves vibrate onto the ceramic, creating mechanical stressand enabling the ceramic to produce voltage. Electromagnetism is anotherknown process and can be utilized in the present invention as the saidlight rays 325 can be passed into magnetic tubes and pipes—inductorscoiled around these pipes or tubes generate voltage. One process, seeFIG. 1, to convert heat into electricity comprises in using athermo-electric semiconductor compound 370. This converter 370 iscomposed of an array of PN silicon junctions 371. Blackened-receivingplates 372 are attached to one side of the said PN junction 371 toabsorb maximum of the incoming radiant energy. Fins 373 are attached tothe other side of the said junction 371. The converter 370 is enclosedin a box with glass windows 374 on the side facing the rays 365. Glasswindows are transparent to most energy radiation from said SOL 325 butopaque to the rays of long wavelength which are emitted by the saidheated receivers 372. In operation, the optical conduit/s carrying theCEW 110, is optically coupled through the coupler 310 to the saiddistributor collimator 320 in optical alignment with a focusing andcollimating system 360, comprised of mirrors and prisms, to capture,align and focus the light rays 325 (the regenerated consumer SOL), sothat rays 365 are directly focused onto the said glass windows 374 ofthe thermoelectric converter 370, from which a highly focused,collimated and overconcentrated beam creates a difference of temperatureat the receiver plates 372 and a current is generated at the PNjunctions 371 and available as an electric potential 375.

1. A system for transmitting solar energy through one or more conduitsof heat-resistance optical cables, comprising: a first mirror-lenssystem for concentrating scattered electromagnetic solar rays into afocal plane to produced focused rays; a mirror system concentrator forconcentrating the focused rays by a N factor; a coupler; an opticalcable to align the focused rays into one conduit of an optical cable; anoptical cable that conveys the concentrated rays into a complex opticalwave and transmits it to a distal end; a coupling focusing collimator toconvert the complex wave into focused rays and align them into threefilters: heat, light, and electricity; a heat filter to filter the heat;a light filter to filter the light; and an electricity filter to filterthe electricity.
 2. The system of claim 1, wherein the first mirror-lenssystem comprises a parabolic or circular-type mirror and a zoom lenssystem, and is optically coupled with the mirror system concentrator; 3.The system of claim 1, wherein said mirror system concentrator,comprised of several mirrors optically coupled with one or more conduitsof said optical cable, generates a singular over-concentrated lighthaving a ray with a high radiant energy.
 4. The system of claim 1,wherein said coupler is comprised of prisms and lenses that opticallyaligns said mirror system concentrator to the optical cable conduit sothat the mirror system concentrator rays enter the conduit to produce amaxim of reflection.
 5. The system of claim 3, wherein said singularover-concentrated light carries a dissipative-type wave with an overallenergy increase, in relation to the energy arriving at the parabolicmirror, by a factor one to one hundred million fold or more.
 6. Thesystem of claim 1, wherein an optical cable that is substantiallyadjacent to the coupler transmits thermally chaotic dissipative wavelikesignals.
 7. The system of claim 1, wherein a coupling focusing andcollimator system is comprised of prisms and lenses, and issubstantially adjacent to the optical cable, and optically aligns to adistributive collimator.
 8. The system of claim 1, wherein adistributive collimator, comprised of prisms and lenses, and opticallyaligned with the said coupling focusing collimator, converts aregenerated SOL into different forms of energy: heat, light andelectricity.
 9. A system for converting audible and non-audibleelectromagnetic wave into energy and transmitting it through conduits ofheat-resistance optical cables, comprising: a first reflective mediumincluding an acoustic bowl; a second refractive medium composed ofobjective lenses; a mirror system concentrator; a coupler; an opticalcable; a coupler; a focusing collimator; a distributive collimator; aheat filter; a light filter; and an electricity filter.
 10. The systemof claim 9, wherein the acoustic bowl, comprised of a reflective concavemetal that captures audible, non-audible, and non-visibleelectromagnetic radiation.
 11. The system of claim 9, wherein saidacoustic bowl optically aligned with the zoom-lens system is opticallycoupled with said mirror system concentrator;
 12. The system of claim 9,wherein said mirror system concentrator, comprised of several mirrorsoptically coupled with one or more conduits of said optical cable,generates a singular over-concentrated light (SOL) having an extremelythin ray width with a high radiant energy.
 13. The system of claim 9,wherein said coupler, comprised of prisms and lenses, optically alignssaid MSC to the optical cable conduit so that the MSC rays enter theconduit to produce maxim of reflection (typically at a 45 degree angle).14. The system of claim 10, wherein said acoustic non-acoustic bowl andzoom lens system includes the said mirror system concentrator and thesaid coupler.
 15. The system of claim 9, wherein said first mirror-lenssystem includes the said mirror system concentrator and the saidcoupler.
 16. A method of capturing and transmitting radiationcomprising: capturing radiation; focusing the captured radiation;concentrating the focused radiation; collimating the concentratedradiation; transmitting the collimated radiation through an opticalconduit to produce a complex energy wave; and extracting the light, heatand electricity from the complex energy wave.
 17. The method of claim 16and further including the step of distributing the light, heat andelectricity.
 18. The method of claim 16 wherein the radiation is solarradiation.
 19. The method of claim 16 wherein the radiation is focusedby a factor of N, wherein N is in the range of one to one hundredmillion.
 20. A system for collecting solar radiation comprising: anoptical collector adapted to collect solar radiation; a lens systemadapted to focus said collected solar radiation in rays; a mirrorconcentrator adapted to concentrate said focused rays by N factor; acoupler adapted to produce parallel rays from said concentrated focusedrays; and an optical conduit adapted to concentrate said parallel raysinto a complex energy wave, said conduit having a distal end.
 21. Themethod of claim 20 and further including a collimator at said distal endof said optical conduit and adapted to align the complex energy wavewith filters for heat, light and electricity.
 22. The system of claim 20and further comprising at least one of a heat filter, a light filter andan electricity filter adapted to filter the complex energy wave.
 23. Thesystem of claim 20 wherein said optical collector includes mirrors. 24.The system of claim 20 wherein said optical collector, lens system,mirror concentrator, coupler and optical conduit are axially alignedrelative to one another.
 25. The system of claim 20 wherein said opticalconduit includes a plurality of optical cables.
 26. The system of claim20 wherein said optical conduit is fabricated of glass.
 27. The systemof claim 20 wherein said optical conduit is heat-resistant.
 28. Thesystem of claim 20 wherein said optical collector includes a parabolicmirror and a zoom lens system.
 29. The system of claim 20 wherein saidmirror concentrator includes at least two mirrors and is adapted togenerate singular over-concentrated light.
 30. The system of claim 20wherein said coupler includes prisms and lenses that are opticallyaligned with said mirror concentrator.
 31. The system of claim 20wherein said mirror concentrator is adapted to concentrate said focusedrays by a factor of one to one hundred million.
 32. The system of claim20 wherein said optical conduit is adapted to transmit chaoticdissipative wavelike signals.
 33. The system of claim 21 wherein saidcollimator includes prisms and lenses.
 34. A system for collectingenergy from radiant and mechanical sources, the system comprising: acollector having a focus and configured to capture energy and to directthe captured energy toward the focus; a concentrator positioned at thefocus and configured to receive the directed energy and to concentratethe energy; a collimator coupled to the concentrator and configured toreceive the concentrated energy and to generate a complex energy wave;and a filter coupled to the collimator and configured to filter thecomplex energy wave.
 35. The system of claim 34, wherein said collectorincludes a parabolic mirror for collecting rays indicative of solarradiation.
 36. The system of claim 35, further comprising a refractionlenses configured to receive the captured rays through said parabolicmirror.
 37. The system of claim 34, wherein the collector comprises anacoustic bowl for collecting energy indicative acoustic radiation. 38.The system of claim 37, further comprising reflection and refractionlenses to focus the capture energy through said acoustic bowl.
 39. Thesystem of claim 34, wherein said concentrator comprises at least one ofa lenses and a mirror.
 40. The system of claim 39, wherein saidconcentrator comprises an image forming concentrator.
 41. The system ofclaim 34, wherein the concentrator comprises a non-image formingconcentrator.
 42. The system of claim 1, wherein said filter comprisesat least one of a heat filter configured to extract heat, a light filterconfigured to extract visible light, and an electricity filterconfigured to extract electricity.
 43. A method for collecting energyfrom radiant and mechanical sources, the method comprising: capturingenergy; directing the captured energy toward one or more points;concentrating the directed energy thereby increasing a concentrationindex near the one or more points; generating a complex energy wavebased on the concentrated energy near the one or more points; andfiltering the complex energy wave.
 44. The method of claim 43, whereincapturing the energy includes collecting the radiant rays indicative ofsolar radiation with a parabolic mirror.
 45. The method of claim 43,wherein capturing the energy comprises collecting energy indicative ofacoustic radiation with an acoustic bowl.
 46. The method of claim 45,further comprising focusing through reflection and refraction lenses thecapture energy.
 47. The method of claim 43, wherein concentrating thedirected energy comprises concentrating the directed energy with animage forming concentrator.
 48. The method of claim 43, whereinconcentrating the directed energy comprises concentrating the directedenergy with a non-image forming concentrator.
 49. The method of claim43, wherein filtering the complex energy wave comprises heat filteringthe complex energy wave to extract heat.
 50. The method of claim 43,wherein filtering the complex energy wave comprises light filtering thecomplex energy wave to extract visible light.
 51. The method of claim43, wherein filtering the complex energy wave comprises electricityfiltering the complex energy wave to extract electricity.
 52. The methodof claim 43, and further including the step of generating heat.
 53. Themethod of claim 43, and further including the step of generating light.54. The method of claim 43, and further including the step of generatingelectricity.
 55. The method of claim 43, wherein in the generating step,a condensed thermodynamic space is created.
 56. The method of claim 55,wherein said space employs an inward folding of surfaces for extractingadditional energy while transmitting the complex energy wave.